We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode Rejecting Tariffs, or Rejecting Uncertainty?

Rejecting Tariffs, or Rejecting Uncertainty?

2025/4/8
logo of podcast The Charlie Kirk Show

The Charlie Kirk Show

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
A
Andrew Colvin
B
Blake Neff
E
E.J. Antoni
Topics
Andrew Colvin: 我认为市场波动剧烈,但大家不必过度恐慌。虽然形势复杂多变,但情况并非完全糟糕。我们应该保持冷静,不要被市场短期波动所影响。特朗普总统的政策旨在重塑美国与贸易伙伴的关系,虽然过程可能颠簸,但最终将带来积极变化。他的贸易政策旨在重塑美国经济,虽然过程可能颠簸,但最终将带来积极变化。我相信,只要我们坚持下去,最终会取得成功。欧盟愿意与美国达成零关税协议,是因为特朗普政府强硬的贸易政策迫使他们做出让步。 Blake Neff: 我认为市场波动反映了人们对贸易协议达成可能性的预期,以及对特朗普政府贸易策略的担忧。特朗普政府的关税政策缺乏针对性,未能有效促进美国制造业回流。比尔·阿克曼的观点代表了很多人对关税政策的担忧,他们认为这将对商业信心造成严重损害。市场需要可预测性,尽快建立一个稳定的基准点对长期发展有利。 E.J. Antoni: 我认为市场波动主要源于信息的不确定性,而非基本面恶化。市场经历了历史上最大的盘中波动,这与市场对信息的反应有关。特朗普的目标是实现真正的互惠关税,但目前的关税结构与这一目标背道而驰。特朗普的贸易策略目标正确,但实施方式存在问题,主要原因在于其政府内部人员的失职。为了稳定市场并实现贸易目标,特朗普政府需要与其他国家就关税进行更清晰的谈判,并制定更合理的关税结构。美国经济需要供应侧改革,包括减税、减支和放松管制,关税政策应与之相协调。将关税纳入预算调节法案可以为减税提供资金来源,并促进经济增长。解决美国经济问题,关键在于关注民生,而不是简单地将财富从华尔街转移到普通民众手中。市场下跌并非因为关税本身,而是因为市场对未来政策的不确定性。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The podcast discusses the wild swings in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, exceeding 2,600 points in a single day. The hosts analyze the impact of tariffs and trade wars on market volatility, exploring various perspectives and potential solutions. They emphasize the need for predictability and stability.
  • Largest single-day point fluctuation in Dow history
  • Market reacted to rumors of a 90-day tariff pause
  • Disagreement on the effectiveness of tariffs
  • Need for predictability in the market

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Hey everybody, welcome to the Charlie Kirk show, this breaking news edition. It's myself and Blake Neff. We go through the breaking news of the day, including additional China tariffs,

Wild swings in the Dow of 2,600 plus the largest single day point fluctuation in the history of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. What's causing it? What's behind it? We also bring on Dr. EJ and Tony from Heritage to help us make sense of these economic indicators and this volatility in the market. But listen, here's the bottom line.

Stay the course. Stay steady. Keep your wits about you. The sky is not falling. We break it down right here for you. Please consider becoming a member at members.charliekirk.com. That's members.charliekirk.com and become a paying monthly subscriber to our show. You get access to our Friday Ask Me Anything episodes where we're live on national radio, live on podcast, and you guys get to be a part of the show. We have exclusive content, exclusive articles.

and exclusive giveaways for events and merch, all that kind of stuff. So please, members.charliekirk.com. We'd love to see you there. Buckle up. Here we go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus. I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.

I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy. His spirit, his love of this country. He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point USA. We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here.

Noble Gold Investments is the official gold sponsor of The Charlie Kirk Show, a company that specializes in gold IRAs and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with Noble Gold Investments at noblegoldinvestments.com. That is noblegoldinvestments.com. It's where I buy all of my gold. Go to noblegoldinvestments.com.

I'm Andrew Colvin, executive producer of The Charlie Kirk Show, and I'm joined by the one and only Blake Neff, one of our producers here on the show. Blake, this has been an action-packed morning when it comes to

The economy, financials, the tariff war, the trade war. But Blake, let's just bring our audience up to speed of what's happened in the last few hours here. We have seen the largest, just by point, maybe not by percentage, but by points, a 2,600-point swing on the Dow. It was down like, you know, let's say 1,500 points. It swung up to as high as about 850, 860 points.

based on some rumors that President Trump was considering a 90-day pause in his tariff regime. That turned out to be fake news, fake news. But in the meantime, we've seen the market fluctuate. Currently, it's down about 940, the Dow. But here's what I would say.

to everybody out there watching wondering what the heck is going on. Don't pay too close of attention to the market currently. There is a lot of moving pieces. There is a lot that is changing in and in flux any given moment. So everybody just take a breath, breathe.

Let's just assume that the market has factored a lot of this stuff in. There will continue to be market shifts and fluctuations. Nevertheless, we don't know where all this is going to go. We don't know where it's going to land. But the sky is not falling, I assure you, despite a lot of prognosticators and economists saying,

awfulizing on the internet, awfulizing on business shows and the like. So Blake, I want to get your take on this. I know that you are, let's just say in the spectrum of pro-tariff or anti-tariff, you're sort of, I would say somewhere in the middle. So I'm curious about your take of what you've seen this morning. We were on chats Sunday night, basically predicting, I would say a much bigger,

market collapse than what we've ultimately seen. Now, the day is not done yet. It's about we're down 840 as I'm looking at it right now. What is your take on the news that's unfolded so far? Well, it's been back and forth all day. The line I saw was when there was basically a false report that a 90 day pause was likely or imminent. The overall stock markets rose about two trillion dollars in value.

It's three. Yeah, three trillion maybe. And it's gone up and down, up and down all the day. And I think probably the reason it's more moderate is I think there's a greater sense that some sort of deals are likely to be made. We have the European Union offering to junk a bunch of tariffs. We have Vietnam offering to eliminate all tariffs if they can make a deal. And we have Trump saying we're basically open to negotiating with every country that isn't China. And if you take

the U.S. trade deficit. Most trade the U.S. does is not with China. So if you reduce the range of trade war from every single country in the world to just China, that's undoing a lot of what we've announced in the past week. As you said, I'm more in the middle on this. I would say what I feel and what a lot of people feel concerned about

Is the sense that this was like just taking a giant like it was like they wanted to push one single button to achieve everything they wanted to do. There's been reporting that one of the offices in the Trump White House, they actually did go and they figured out what would a reciprocal tariff be on every tariff on U.S. goods. So they, you know, they look at what actual tariffs are they imposing in France? What are they imposing in Vietnam? What are they imposing in China?

Great Britain, and so on. And then they were going to match those point for point. And then apparently the White House just thought, nah, let's just go for the easiest one. And so they did this trade deficit-based calculation. And what's missing from that is, what do we say our goal here is? Our goal is to bring more manufacturing back to America. But when it's just like this, it's not finely tuned to that purpose. So, for example, you're not

You're doing a flat tariff on everything. You're not doing, for example, a tariff on finished goods, but then no tariff on raw materials. That would encourage people to bring raw materials into the U.S. and then make stuff here. Instead, it's just basically a hike on everything very abruptly. And I think a lot of people are very worried about what the impact of that will be. Yeah, no, and I think that is one of the critiques that I've heard floated, that it's a...

you know, a sledgehammer when a scalpel was needed and that sort of thing. And I will say that, listen, you know, President Trump, he did not hide that this was going to happen. Now, we didn't understand the details or how it was going to be, you know,

you know, sort of put into place, put into practice. Nevertheless, this is not a mystery. President Trump has been very, very clear about this. And I, you know, I happen to, and Blake, you and I have talked about this privately. I am a true believer in this, in this strategy. I hear every one of the pushbacks and I absolutely agree.

you know, disagree. I will say, you know, they could have done it without so much pomp and circumstance. They could have just done it quietly and done it country by country. I would have been fine with that. But directionally, here's what, I mean, I completely agree that there needed to be, as Jack Posobiec calls, a reset of the great reset. We needed a reset of the way that we do business with our trading partners. And I do believe that,

President Trump's art of the deal brinkmanship can be unnerving for the market. It can be unnerving for many people that are just watching it take place. But...

The base that voted for Trump wanted change. And there are clips after clips after clips of farmers, beef ranchers that are saying, yes, thank you, because all of these other countries have been able to sell into America for years. And we haven't been able to do the same to those countries, Australia, Argentina, whatever. This is recalibrating jobs.

different parts of the economy, and that's going to be rough and bumpy for a little while. But I think what is very clear after this morning is that President Trump is dead serious, Peter Navarro is dead serious, Howard Letnick is dead serious about resetting and recalibrating a lot of these trade negotiations. Now, one of the pieces of news that came across the wire this morning was

out of the EU. Okay. So I'm going to go ahead and play this clip. This is what I think is a good sign. And I'll explain on the other side of it. 136.

We stand ready to negotiate with the United States. Indeed, we have offered zero-for-zero tariffs for industrial goods, as we have successfully done with many other trading partners, because Europe is always ready for a good deal. So we keep it on the table. But we are also prepared to respond through countermeasures and defend our interests. So this was European Commission President Ursula, that's quite the name, von der Leyen.

And she says the EU stands ready for a zero for zero tariff deal. Now, you know, she makes it sound like this is something they do all the time. Everything's fine. I don't know why we couldn't have just, you know, gotten together and hammered this out. Well, here's the problem. They couldn't hammer this out because the EU are really good negotiators. The United States has been locked in by a free trading, I would say, cult that has

sold a lot of our workers down the river. Meanwhile, EU has been very strategic about protecting its industry. And so why is she willing to say this now? She's willing to say it because President Trump is playing hardball and the world is quickly catching up to the fact that we're not messing around. Now, yeah, we've lost trillions in market value

over this trade war, these, these tariff, this tariff policy to adjust essentially a one to $1.5 trillion trade deficit. And a lot of people will say $8 trillion in, uh, in market cap is not worth a $1.5 trillion trade deficit. You have to expand that over years, folks. And you have to also assume the human price that has been paid, uh,

as a result over years of these trade tariffs and these trade barriers that these countries put up. So guess what? As soon as we get resolution on this, you're going to see that market cap shoot right back up. Are you tired of Hollywood elites and woke corporations deciding what gets made? Do you want to take back control of culture and support stories that reflect your values? Then it's time to join Angel Guild, where real Americans like you have a voice in the future of entertainment.

Angel Studios, the powerhouse behind The Sound of Freedom and other culture-shifting films, is giving you a seat at the table. No more Hollywood gatekeepers. No more anti-American propaganda. Just bold, faith-driven, freedom-loving content chosen by the people for the people.

Join Angel Guild today and help fund projects that inspire, uplift, and defend truth. The best part is you'll be able to stream amazing, amplifying content like Sound of Hope, After Death, Mike Rose, Something to Stand For, and Homebound. New shows and films are released every week. Be part of a movement that's taking back storytelling from the radical left. This isn't just entertainment. It's a cultural battle. Join today by going to angel.com slash kirk and let's work together to create stories that honor faith,

freedom and family. Blake is, is the sky falling? What does Bill Ackman say? Break, break down this whole story for us. Of course, of course. So Bill Ackman, he's a wall street veteran, very opinionated. He's been a guy, a very loud voice on Twitter and then X over the past few years. He very notably was one of the, uh,

He's generally mostly a Democrat donor historically, and he is one of the most prominent voices who shifted towards being a pretty vocal Trump supporter in 2024. He denounced DEI. He was very involved in attacking universities like Harvard after the 10-7 attacks. So he's a guy who generally in the middle has moved towards supporting the right, probably a good barometer of the centrist Wall Street money person. Yes.

And he has been pretty upset about the tariff announcement, and he's been on a tear the last couple of days on X. He had a very long post last night that's already over 12 million views. I can't read the whole thing, but I want to get to a few excerpts from it.

He says that, you know, the country is 100 percent behind President Trump on fixing a global system of tariffs that has disadvantaged the country. But he says business is a confidence game and confidence depends on trust.

He continues later, He continues further down, He continues further down,

long-term economic commitments in the United States in the middle of an economic nuclear war. That's the term he uses. He says it's not just big companies that will suffer. Small and medium-sized businesses will experience much greater pain.

Because almost no business can pass through an overnight massive increase in the cost of business, and they can't pass that on to their customers. So he's, long story short, he's saying the president has an opportunity on Monday, he was saying this yesterday, to call a timeout and have time to execute on fixing an unfair tariff system. And he got...

pretty angry because just a short time after he posted this, he then followed up and he said, I just figured out why Howard Lutnick in the Trump administration is indifferent to the stock market crashing. He and cancer Fitzgerald, the company that he was from are long bonds. He profits when our economy implodes. It's a bad idea to pick a secretary of commerce whose firm is levered on long fixed income. It is an irreconcilable conflict of interest.

And then this morning he walked back from that. He said, it was unfair of me to lash out at Howard Lutnick. I don't think he is pursuing his self-interest. I'm sure he is doing the best he can. It is not an easy job, but I am just, I, uh, Bill Ackman am frustrated watching what I believe to be a major policy error occur after our country and our president have been making huge economic progress. And that is now at risk due to tariffs. So this is just one guy, but

He is speaking for a lot of people. I think there's a lot of people who are very anxious about what the tariff policy is. They're warning that this will have dramatic consequences if it's not paused or mitigated in some way. And we can see their eggs playing out in the markets every day.

Well, and I will agree with Ackman. I think he's a very smart guy. I don't necessarily think he's a true believer in sort of reforming, reshaping the American economy, especially with our trade deficits. I think he likes it. I don't know that he's got the...

the guts or the true belief and the conviction to stay the course when it gets rocky. And I'm a little bit different in that way. I think, you know, where I will agree with him is that businesses, markets need predictability. And so the sooner that we can get to a predictable baseline, the better it will be long-term. And so whether that baseline is the 10% tariff across the board or

So be it or if we're going to have right now, Trump, you know, basically what happened with China to bring the audience up to speak with that is we essentially had 54% tariffs on China. They came back with reciprocal tariffs or, you know, retaliatory tariffs of 34%. Trump now went to Truth Social and said, listen, we're going to hit you with an additional $1.

a 50%, which would essentially put the tariff over 100% on Chinese imported goods. I think China is his number one nemesis here that he wants to take off the chessboard, and he's playing some high-risk poker. There's no doubt about it. Basically saying China cannot survive without being able to trade all these goods into the United States. Now, there's going to be other problems for us that comes along with China's

China having supply chain issues into the United States. But that is the number one foe that Trump is after. It's very, very clear. So I happen to think that, listen, the sky's not falling. It's going to get bumpy, but we got to stay the course right now.

The world is waking up to the power of gold. National banks are scrambling to secure it. According to the World Gold Council, central banks added 1,000 tons of gold in 2024, the third straight year of net gold buying. They understand what many investors don't. Gold is real money. Unlike paper currency, gold's value doesn't disappear with inflation, reckless government spending, or market crashes.

Now Noble Gold Investments makes it easy for you to claim your share. As our new administration works to reverse the economic chaos of the past, market swings are inevitable. When uncertainty rises, you need something solid, something to keep you on the path to

through financial freedom. Gold can be that foundation. And right now, when you make a qualified investment, Noble Gold will send you a free 10th ounce of a cold coin. Visit noblegoldinvestments.com. That's noblegoldinvestments.com. The world is turning to gold. Shouldn't you be looking into doing that too?

Honored to be joined by Dr. EJ Antone. He's an economist over at Heritage. Dr. Antone, welcome to the show. Thanks for making some time here on a breaking news day. Sum up for us what you are seeing. The market looks like Dow is down 480. I mean, it was down much lower than that. Then it shot up to about plus 840 on some fake news of a 90-day pause in the tariff war. Now we're back down at 450, something like that.

We're hearing news about 50 plus countries that are at the negotiating table. We've got Bibi Netanyahu has just arrived at the White House. Lots happening. Make it make sense for us.

Well, Andrew, thanks for having me. You know, unfortunately, a lot that we have to go on right now is really just rumor. And that's why there's so much volatility in the marketplace. Now, there are a few things that we know for sure, right? Like you mentioned Benjamin Netanyahu being in town. Like that's something we can definitively say is the case. But as far as nations being at the negotiating table, you know,

Again, there's rumors that there's a lot more. There's rumors that there's a lot less. We have heard some EU officials go on the record saying that they are willing on certain things to go to zero tariffs if the U.S. does as well. So, again, there is definitely some good progress here.

But overall, there's a lot of rumor, which means there's a lot of volatility. Another thing that we know for sure was that because there were so many short positions on Wall Street, as soon as we saw a little bit of an uptick today in stocks, there was a rush to cover. In other words, people were starting to buy stocks

for fear that if the price went up, they'd have to buy them at an even higher price. Now, normally, stock prices going up would be a good thing, but in the case of a short position, it's exactly the opposite. You're betting on things going down, not up. So whatever the case may

This all caused a tremendous amount of not just volatility but a huge swing. The Dow had its biggest intraday swing ever, moving over 2,600 points between its lowest and its highest point of the trading day, and we're only halfway done at this point. So, again, tons of rumors, which means tons of volatility. Markets are looking for direction. They're looking for definitive answers.

We thought we were going to get that last week with the tariff announcement. And unfortunately, because of the way these tariffs have been structured, we've gotten exactly the opposite of clear answers. We've gotten a lot of misdirection. Yeah, I want to go into that idea of the way these tariffs are structured, Dr. Antoni, because there's been a lot of back and forth, especially on social media, about

that some people feel that President Trump shot too high on the tariffs, that they're not one-to-one, but they say they're factoring in trade deficits as well as other non-tariff-related trade barriers. Basically, President Trump, if I was looking at this

I would say that he is very provably a true believer that he wants to get equal trade, meaning no trade deficit ongoing with the United States and our trading partners.

I predict that this is going to be a fairly long-term struggle and a trade war, if we want to use that word. Are you seeing the same? And please comment on the way that these tariffs were structured in the first place. Was it done right? Were there things we could have done better?

The floor is yours. Andrew, these are great questions. Thank you for asking them. And it's really something I think where we need to set the record straight because there is so much misinformation out there. There are way too many versions of the truth here. There's only one truth. So here it is. What President Trump wanted were true reciprocal tariffs. In other words, he wanted a kind of economic golden rule, if you will.

where we say to other countries, look, you are imposing these tariff and non-tariff barriers on us. You are penalizing our exporters and therefore our workers. And so we're going to do exactly the same thing to you, holding up a mirror, as it were, to these other countries. That is what he tasked

of his administration with, like the Commerce Department, like the U.S. Trade Representative, et cetera. That was the whole reason for the delay, for example, waiting until April 2nd. It was to give those folks time to calculate what are the average effective

tariff rates among all these different countries around the world. Instead, what we got was something that has literally nothing to do. Let me be perfectly clear. These tariff rates have nothing to do with other nations' tariff and non-tariff barriers. They simply looked at the ratio of imports to exports and only looked at the imports and exports of products, not even services. And so at the end of the day, you're simply looking at trade deficits. And again, it's just the trade deficit in terms of goods.

Unfortunately, that means for some countries where we actually have an overall trade surplus, maybe we sell them shoes. Excuse me. They sell us shoes, so we're buying shoes from them, let's say, and then maybe we turn around and sell them financial services.

And they are buying much more in financial services from us than we buy shoes from them. That's a trade surplus for the United States. Except that according to this formula, it's counted as a trade deficit. And we impose a penalty tariff rate on that country for having that trade deficit in goods with them.

That's a ludicrous trade policy. It's not going to get us what we want, which is more free trade. That's the whole point of reciprocal tariffs. It's to force other nations to get rid of their tariff and non-tariff barriers so that just as foreign nations have access to our consumer markets...

our producers can have access to their consumer markets. That's the goal here. We want more free trade, not less. It's not that we're protectionists. It's that, again, we want true reciprocal free trade, free and fair trade, what some people call it. And the problem with how these tariffs are structured, because they're not actually looking at other nations' tariff and non-tariff barriers, is that we have imposed tariffs

penalty rates on many countries who don't deserve them. Why on earth is it we have a tariff rate on Israel that's almost twice as high as the one on Iran? Why is it that China has a tariff rate that's just, frankly, middle of the pack? They should have the highest rate among any nation because they engage in the most trade abuses, whether that's

manipulation of the currency, subsidizing industry and dumping artificially low-priced products in other countries' markets. You have slave labor. I can go on and on, whether it's currency manipulation, et cetera. The list just goes on and on when it comes to China and all of their unfair trade practices. And yet again, they have a middle-of-the-road tariff rate. So

The issue here is not the goal, right? President Trump absolutely has the right goal. And I even think that his method, if you will, or his tactic of reciprocal tariffs was a good one. The issue here is how that was implemented. The issue here is that he has people within his administration who frankly have not served him well enough.

who did not provide him with the reciprocal tariff schedule that was promised. That's the issue here. And again, if you look at markets reaction, when it was first announced we were going to have this 10% across the board tariff, markets actually rallied initially. The futures markets went up, I think, about 1.5% on that news. But then all of a sudden, when this tariff schedule appeared, where it made absolutely no sense initially,

These numbers clearly did not come from tariff and non-tariff barriers. That's when futures started to tumble. And then we've had now three days, basically, where the markets have really taken it on the chin. Again, this all has to do with uncertainty. People don't know where we're going to go from here. And that's a problem.

Yeah, and I think to your point, I mean, President Trump, I believe everything that I'm seeing and everything that I've seen from him historically is dead set on correcting a trade deficit that we currently are experiencing. Let's just play one of many clips that are out there. Let's play 107. This is 2012 President Trump talking about tariffs, 107. And I said, somebody said, well, what would you do? What can you do?

So easy. I drop a 25% tax on China. And, you know, I said to somebody that it's really the messenger. The messenger is important. I could have one man say, we're going to tax you 25%. And I could say another, listen, you're going to tax you 25%.

I mean, there's tons of these clips around. So, I mean, here's what I, and he's been consistent throughout the years. And I think he's seeing this moment as his one opportunity where he's early on in his term to seize this issue and push it forward. Now, I will agree that the way it was done, I think, has spooked the markets. I think he could have done it a different way. So let's game this out then, Dr. Antoni. So, so.

where would you like to see his strategy go from here? Because Trump is going to claim a win one way or the other. We know politically that's going to be part of the next step.

What does he have to do to sort of claim plausibly that his tariff and his policies have effectuated the change he wanted while also rewarding the markets, bringing everybody to a stable place with predictability? Well, I think one of the key things is going to be during these negotiating processes with different countries will be to come up with actual average effective tariff rates. So

You look at a nation like Canada, look at all of their tariffs, but also their non-tariff barriers, their quotas, for example, that they put on things like American dairy products. You know, that really hurts our dairy farmers. So figure out, okay, what is the mathematical equivalent in terms of an overall tariff?

And so say to Canada, look, if you are willing to get rid of X, Y, and Z tariffs or non-tariff barriers that you currently have in place, we will reduce this tariff rate by a certain amount. Okay? And that's your negotiating tool. But the problem with, again, with the current tariff schedule, when there is no real relationship between those trade barriers and the rates,

Some of these nations are coming to the negotiating table with their arms up in the air saying, we have no idea what we're supposed to do here. We have no idea how we can actually get these tariff rates down. So I think some further explanation from the White House and some further clarification on what the actual rates should look like would go a long way. The other really big thing...

is that it seems like we've kind of put the cart before the horse in a certain sense. You know, what this economy really needs is supply side policies. We need drastic, I mean, drastic cuts to government spending, to taxes, to regulation. We need an energy production boom in this country. And so by getting tariffs first without all of those other things,

The American middle class who has been drowning, it's like we just threw them an anchor without first building them a boat. And so it is imperative that we get things like the tax cut across the finish line. And also what I would really like to see from Congress, you know, this isn't just the administration's fault. Congress has been painfully slow to act on this.

So I would love to see Congress in the reconciliation process where we get the tax bill through to include in that process this 10% kind of baseline tariff that the president has put in place, put that into statute, but do it as a border adjustment tax. And that has a lot of different advantages. First, it gives a huge benefit to our exporters, which encourages production here, encourages manufacturing, and encourages American jobs, which is

tremendous, but it also puts the tariff only on imports. So you're not going to have things like the car industry where a car part may cross the border between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada half a dozen times before it goes into the final car assembly. You don't want that to get hit with a tax every single time. So a border adjustment tax solves a

a lot of those problems. And the other great thing by putting it in statute is the fact that now you can include that in the calculation of the reconciliation process so that all the revenues can be used to reduce income taxes. Hey everybody, Charlie Kirk here. What does the future hold for business? Ask nine experts, you'll get all sorts of different answers. In fact, you might get 10 answers if you ask nine experts. They'll say a bull market, a bear market, rates will rise or fall, inflation up or down. Can someone please invent a crystal ball? Until then, over...

38,000 businesses have future-proofed their business with NetSuite by Oracle, the number one cloud ERP bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, HR into one fluid platform. With one unified business management suite, there's one source of truth giving you the visibility and control you need to make quick decisions.

With real-time insights and forecasting, you're peering into the future with actionable data. When you're closing the books in days, not weeks, you're spending less time looking backwards and more time on what's next. At Turning Point USA, this is exactly what we plan on using. Whether your company is earning millions or even hundreds of millions of dollars, NetSuite helps you respond to immediately challenges and seize your biggest opportunities. Go to netsuite.com slash kirk.

Dr. Antoni, you were talking about something, and I think it's a nuanced point, but I think it's incredibly important because you brought up the reconciliation package. Now, there was some waffling, and I would say Congress was attempting to water down some of the spending cuts, the tax, extending Trump's tax cuts. There was, I mean, you've got the moderates and you've got the fiscal hawks, and I mean, it's a lot of work.

what we were getting was a muddled mess. I do think one of the unintended consequences, positive consequences,

of what we're seeing in the markets is now Congress has added incentive to ensure that we are getting the supply side relief that you're talking about, meaning are we going to get deregulation? Are we going to get these tax cuts extended? Are we also going to add this 10% baseline tariff or you...

categorizes it a different way. But what that does is it essentially builds in that revenue into this reconciliation package. Continue on with that because I think it's a really important point that nobody's really bringing up at this point. Well, thank you, Andrew. Basically, because these different tariffs, which are going to generate revenue, these tariffs are being put in place by the executive and not put in statute by the legislature,

they can't be counted in the reconciliation process in terms of revenue that's going to come into the Treasury. And that's so important because under reconciliation, this is supposed to be a process by which you take an existing budget and you basically just tweak it. And so you're not supposed to have drastic changes to either revenue or expenditures. You're supposed to essentially have no effect.

It should even out. So if we're going to make a change like reducing marginal tax rates on income taxes, which is terrific, that's a great thing. It's exactly what the economy needs. It's what the middle class needs. They need tax relief. But now you're going to need to offset that somewhere. And I understand the fact

that there's a law for curve effect here. In other words, as you reduce tax rates, that increases economic activity, which grows your tax base. And if you grow the tax base faster than the tax rate declines, overall tax revenue actually increases. That's what we saw during the first Trump administration. The problem is that's not how the Congressional Budget Office scores it.

And so you need what they sometimes call an offset to the reduction in personal income tax rates. And a great way to do that would be to take the revenue that's going to come in from a tariff, a border adjustment tax is what we should really have. Totally agree.

And then you can now essentially shift some of the tax burden onto foreigners, which is great from an economic standpoint because there is actually an externality at play here. It is our Navy that patrols the world's sea lanes. It is our Navy at our expense that keeps the ocean safe for international trade. And so it only makes sense –

that other nations would help pay that expense. And a great way for them to do it would be to tax the very thing that our Navy is supporting, which again, is international trade. I totally agree. I think that's really well said, Dr. Antoni. I want to switch gears slightly here. And this clip was making the rounds. It was Secretary of Treasury Scott Besson. He sat down with Tucker Carlson and he made this pretty remarkable statement. Now, I want to I want to

Factor in what Scott Besson says here in this clip and then kind of use that to understand the way the market is reacting. Is it an overreaction? Are the wrong people incentivized in the wrong ways here? So let's go ahead and play cut 124.

And I'm not happy with what's going on in the market today, but the distribution of equities across households, the top 10% of Americans own 88% of equities, 88% of the stock market. The next 40% owns 12% of the stock market. The bottom 50 has debt.

They have credit card bills. They rent their homes. They have auto loans. And we've got to give them some relief. So, Dr. Antonio, let me frame it this way. There seems to be a disconnect between Wall Street and Main Street. And obviously, when Trump has done this tariff regimen, we are seeing Wall Street panic. They're unsure. There's no predictability. I understand that. The point is...

Is this recalibration of our economy a way to make it so that Main Street finally gets that relief and Wall Street's just going to have to take it on the chin? Or is there a way to make them both win? That's a great question, Andrew. And look, it's not that we need to redistribute wealth from Wall Street to Main Street. The redistribution of wealth is not the answer here. Instead, what we primarily want is we want to focus on Main Street wealth.

Now, the good news for Wall Street is the fact that when Main Street does better, Wall Street will too, right? The problem is that in this country, we haven't had that happen in a very, very long time. Instead, Wall Street has continuously to, has continued to do better at the expense of Main Street. When you have people

Runaway inflation, for example, what goes up in price? Everything. The price of a home goes up, rent goes up, food goes up. But you know what else goes up? Equities. So stocks appreciate in price tremendously. Those who already own homes, those who own an apartment complex, let's say, whatever the case may be, all of those assets are going to rise in price. And so for the people who have essentially...

already established a wealth position, they do just fine. But everyone else, as the secretary was just saying, they're forced to take on a lot of debt. Homes become perpetually out of reach. The median mortgage payment on a home today is literally twice as high as it was four years ago. In other words,

under the Biden administration, the median price home became twice as expensive. That's obscene. And that's why for the first time since the Great Depression, people think they're not going to be able to achieve the standard of living that their parents had. So this whole reordering of global trade is not about trying to penalize Wall Street or force the market to tank. No, the reason the markets are tanking right now is because they're looking for direction. They're trying to figure out what exactly is this new world order going to look like.

I totally agree. I think you're 100% right. What they want is predictability. It's almost like the market isn't rejecting tariffs on its face. What it's rejecting is

Can we predict what the basic operating assumptions are for businesses internationally? And by the way, just as we're talking here, Dr. Antoni, we're seeing some green. The S&P 500 looks up. The NASDAQ looks back up. The Dow's down 200. It was down much, much more. I'm not sure what the... 1,200 at one point.

Yeah, I'm not sure what's any signals causing this. But hey, perhaps we end on a high note here, Dr. Antony, that that, you know, the sky is not falling. We're going to get some resolution here. Stay the course. Keep your wits about you. But your points are well made. Thank you for making the time on a busy breaking news day, Dr. Antony. Andrew, thank you for having me. Thanks so much for listening, everybody. Talk to you soon. For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk.com.